The email will be titled something like "Your June 2010 LSAT Score." Aside from some warnings about not altering the email, it will also contain your score and related percentile ranking. The email will also recommend you access your LSAC account to view your official LSAT score report and other test documents.

After logging into your LSAC account and going to the "LSAT status" section, you will see links to six documents: an official score report that lists your answers and TCR's along with scores from previous administrations, a document showing the relationship between scaled scores and percentile rankings, a copy of your scantron sheet, a copy of your writing sample, a conversion chart for raw score to scaled score, and finally, a copy of a blank test booklet.

Please do not reply to this email. E-mail sent to this address cannot be answered.Please contact us with your comments, questions, or concerns at LSACinfo@LSAC.org. Please provide your LSAC account number in all correspondence.

Dear XXXX,

LSAC account number: L XXXXXX

Your June 2009 LSAT score is 174. The percentile rank is 99.

This is your unofficial score report.

A copy of your LSAT Score Report will be available under the LSAT tab in the LSAT Status section of your LSAC online account at http://www.lsac.org. Other test related documents (in accordance with LSAC disclosure policies) may also be available under LSAT Documents.

Law School Admission Council

You'll have access to the different sections, the answer sheet, conversion chart, etc online on LSAC.

citrustang wrote:The email will be titled something like "Your June 2010 LSAT Score." Aside from some warnings about not altering the email, it will also contain your score and related percentile ranking. The email will also recommend you access your LSAC account to view your official LSAT score report and other test documents.

After logging into your LSAC account and going to the "LSAT status" section, you will see links to six documents: an official score report that lists your answers and TCR's along with scores from previous administrations, a document showing the relationship between scaled scores and percentile rankings, a copy of your scantron sheet, a copy of your writing sample, a conversion chart for raw score to scaled score, and finally, a copy of a blank test booklet.

citrustang wrote:The email will be titled something like "Your June 2010 LSAT Score." Aside from some warnings about not altering the email, it will also contain your score and related percentile ranking. The email will also recommend you access your LSAC account to view your official LSAT score report and other test documents.

After logging into your LSAC account and going to the "LSAT status" section, you will see links to six documents: an official score report that lists your answers and TCR's along with scores from previous administrations, a document showing the relationship between scaled scores and percentile rankings, a copy of your scantron sheet, a copy of your writing sample, a conversion chart for raw score to scaled score, and finally, a copy of a blank test booklet.

Yes, you get a copy of the questions.

Ahhh ok, i'm surprised by that but good to know. Do they score the experimental section too?

citrustang wrote:The email will be titled something like "Your June 2010 LSAT Score." Aside from some warnings about not altering the email, it will also contain your score and related percentile ranking. The email will also recommend you access your LSAC account to view your official LSAT score report and other test documents.

After logging into your LSAC account and going to the "LSAT status" section, you will see links to six documents: an official score report that lists your answers and TCR's along with scores from previous administrations, a document showing the relationship between scaled scores and percentile rankings, a copy of your scantron sheet, a copy of your writing sample, a conversion chart for raw score to scaled score, and finally, a copy of a blank test booklet.

Yes, you get a copy of the questions.

Ahhh ok, i'm surprised by that but good to know. Do they score the experimental section too?

The experimental is undisclosed since they are used for future questions.

Crazycall2 wrote:anyone know which shows up first: the e-mail or the score report on your LSAC account?

The score report may come a little bit sooner, but I recommend just waiting on the email.

When I took the September LSAT last year, my score came really late for some reason (I think around 9pm). Because of this, I kept checking my LSAC account, and at least for me I ended up getting the email slightly before the results showed up on my account.